The new Bristol AMR interdisciplinary research network, 'Bristol AMR', will build on the EPSRC-funded BristolBridge network which helped to 'bridge the gaps' between the physical sciences, engineering and biomedical science communities to find new solutions for tackling AMR.
Professor Adrian Mulholland from the School of Chemistry and BristolBridge lead, explained: "BristolBridge funding of networking events and projects helped form new collaborations and projects across four of the University's six faculties resulting in a patent, spin-out company () and a further £3.8 million AMR funding."
The importance of tackling AMR and continuing the legacy of BristolBridge has been recognised as a strategic research priority by the University through the EBI funding a
Professor Rachael Gooberman-Hill, Director of the , said: "We are delighted to fund Bristol AMR which is one of our new cross-faculty initiatives. These initiatives build on Bristol's world-leading research to tackle challenges that can only be addressed by multidisciplinary research teams."
Bristol AMR is led by a cross-faculty committee with representatives from the Faculties of Life Sciences, Health Sciences, Science, Engineering, Arts and Social Sciences and Law to forge new links via networking events and to create new collaborative pump-priming AMR projects. The network will further help Bristol's interdisciplinary AMR research community to come together to compete for future large-scale funding, strengthening the University as a UK centre of excellence for interdisciplinary AMR research.
Matthew Avison, Professor of Molecular Bacteriology from the Faculty of Life Sciences and Chair of Bristol AMR, said: "The funding from the Elizabeth Blackwell Institute is a such a great boost to the AMR research community and recognition of the extraordinary success we have had in winning funding from the - a total of £7.4 million since 2015.
"I am also delighted that we are also receiving further strategic support from the University to fund two PhD studentships to join our MRC/DoH-funded project to study AMR in Thailand plus another share of institutional Global Challenges Research Fund for AMR activities, which shows the University is committed to working with partners across the world to tackle the global challenge of AMR. So far £90K has now been awarded for activities relating to AMR in low to middle income countries (LMICs) and this will be disbursed through Bristol AMR too. The University's Alumni Association has also pledged philanthropic support for AMR research to match fund a further two PhD studentships from its legacy funding."
The new Bristol AMR will be launched by Professor Gooberman-Hill and the focus of the event will be to illustrate interdisciplinary research already undertaken 勛圖厙 that has led to potentially transformative outcomes and policy recommendations. The aim is to encourage others to join the Bristol AMR network in tackling AMR.
At the launch people from across the University will set out how working in an interdisciplinary way has benefited their work in researching AMR in the context of LIMCs; to safely reduce avoidable antibiotic prescribing in primary care and livestock production and discovering and translating new technological solutions to treat and diagnose antibiotic resistant bacteria. The latter include ways of inhibiting bacterial resistance proteins and restoring the activity of failing antimicrobials and performing rapid antibiotic susceptibility testing directly on patient samples to inform effective antibiotic prescribing.
Professors Matthew Avison and Adrian Mulholland will set out the new Bristol AMR pump-priming and networking opportunities. Bristol AMR is also a 'call to action', showcasing how work across all disciplines — including Arts, Humanities, Social Sciences and Law — is crucial if research is to combat one of the biggest threats to modern medicine.
Antimicrobial resistance - or AMR - is a global threat, with an estimated 700,000 people dying from resistant infections every year. This week [12-18 November] is .